In this series of photo essays, the Shoofly Magazine showcases the work of professional photographers. Their only instructions? Show us the coast through your lens. This month we feature the work of photographer P. Chris Christofferson.

P. Chris Christofferson: Nature photography was birthed as a new passion when I had the opportunity to call Waveland, Mississippi, home in 2012 and joyfully cast aside my previous life as a Louisiana medical malpractice attorney.

Exploring on foot or bike, my camera lens eagerly captures the kaleidoscope of imagery in the beckoning bay, wetlands and our own nurturing garden. Evocative statuary in our old cemeteries also draws my eye and heart. This vision translates into cards and canvases available at Gallery 220 (220 Main Street) in Bay St. Louis and my website, www.pchris.net.

Timeless

The Bay, with its white sand beach, has a fresh vibrancy every day. It can be appreciated in no better a place than on the iconic swing at the foot of Nicholson Avenue in Waveland which has serenely absorbed the soul of that corner for decades. ​​

Dropping into this niche are a stunning variety of birds which I eagerly photograph. A few of the year round denizens are Great Blue Herons, Brown and White Pelicans, gulls, terns, cormorants, Bald Eagles, and sandpipers like Sanderlings and Willets.

Great Blue Heron

Snowy Egret

Brown Pelican

White Pelicans

During the winter, I watch for the migrants; Killdeer, plovers, Black Skimmers, some gulls and ducks. During the summer, the exquisite Least Terns pick a Pass Christian beach spot to nest which the Audubon Society immediately ropes off. There I spend endless hours in photography heaven.

Least Terns

The Hancock county wetlands, especially behind the railroad tracks in Clermont Harbor, are teeming with wildlife. Here, patience is rewarded with images of exquisite beauty.

Alligators, turtles, Great Blue Herons, Little Blue Herons, Green Herons, Bald Eagles, several species of hawks, woodpeckers, egrets and blackbirds, as well as cormorants, Anhingas, Eastern Kingbirds, Eastern Phoebes, Yellow-rumped Warblers, Blue-grey Gnatcatchers, are just a few I’ve framed.

​Our wetlands are also refuge for a long list of seasonal ducks and ibis which pose as if dreamscape paintings in mesmerizing fall and winter light.

Mystical

Bald Eagle Hunting

Alligator Assessing Me

Haloed Reflection

Clermont Harbor Fall Afternoon

Ibis Roosting

A lovely dividend of Waveland coastal living is a home with flower gardens to attract bees, butterflies and birds, thus hour upon hour of blissful photography.

The gardens my husband and I plant focus on butterfly magnets with nectar-laden flowers and on hosts for their caterpillars. So far, I’ve memorialized for cards and canvas the following; Black, Giant, Spicebush and Eastern Swallowtail, Gulf Frittilary, Painted Lady, Clouded and Cloudless Sulphur, Common Buckeye and Monarch.

Monarch on Milkweed

Eastern Swallowtails

Fritillary on Zinnia

Old cemeteries on the coast, some long-forgotten, can hold statuary evoking powerful emotions. To capture the dignity, serenity and strength as memories of the sacred souls resting therein, is supremely gratifying. One such statue is in Bayou LaCroux Cemetery.